Truly Mind-Blowing

Officials see no
Urgency to rock the boat
YCC ‘s still law

As reported in numerous places overnight, the BOJ has let slip that they are not considering any changes to the current policy mix at their meeting next week.  You may recall that there has been an uptick in discussion about the ongoing review that began just last month and the idea that Ueda-san was preparing to tweak YCC or to end YCC or something else.  That has been a key driving force in the recent rise in JGB yields, which had climbed 10bps, to as high as 0.47%, during July.  Short JPY positions in the currency market were getting covered in waves and we saw the yen strengthen more than 5% in the first two weeks of July.

This was all part of the narrative of the dollar’s imminent decline and used in conjunction with the rising de-dollarization narrative as part of a new world order type of argument.  Nobody wanted to hold dollars, and this was the proof!  

Oops!  Maybe this narrative will need to be tweaked a bit as not only has the BOJ thrown a serious amount of cold water on the changing YCC story, with JGB yields slipping a further 2.5bps last night, but this morning we were also treated to a story about India’s Foreign Minister explaining the country will not support any common BRICS currency for trade.  There is no doubt that Russia and China would like to see the dollar lose its global hegemonic status, but wishes are just that.  Do not dismiss the dollar at any time in the near future, it is not going to lose its current status.  However, that doesn’t mean it will stop fluctuating in FX markets, those are two different things.

There once was a great big recession
Forecast by the ‘nomics profession
The Fed had raised rates
For thirteen straight dates
And so, growth seemed out of the question

But so far the data is showing
The ‘cononmy’s seems to be growing
With joblessness sinking
Quite many are thinking
No landing.  It’s truly mind-blowing

Aside from the yen news, the market continues to try to understand the current economic cycle, which is clearly not very similar to any cycle in recent memory.  Every day I read things from very accomplished analysts about the imminent decline in the US economy and how the Fed will be forced to eat crow soon enough.  As well, if I scroll a bit further down my Fintwit feed, I find different accomplished analysts who explain that the no landing scenario is the best estimate and that the economy is on solid footing with inflation declining smoothly and heading back to its “natural” spot of 2%.  

And in fairness, one can slice the data up in many different ways to draw both conclusions.  One of the most interesting features of this situation is how different asset classes are concluding very different things from the data.  Broadly speaking, the US equity market is all-in on the no-landing scenario, trading higher almost every day (yesterday’s NASDAQ performance excepted and due to some weaker than expected earnings numbers), while the commodity space is far more circumspect over continued growth with base metals, especially, under broad pressure for the past several months.  Given the importance of copper and aluminum in the industrial process for almost every manufactured item, the pricing certainly indicates anticipated weakness in demand.  We know this because there is no excess supply on the way.

As to the bond market, I fear that the signal-to-noise ratio from bond yields has greatly diminished during the period of QE.  I am not one to easily dismiss the recession signal from the inverted yield curve, and as we currently sit at -100bps for the 2yr-10yr curve and -160bps for the 3m-10yr, both extremely large inversions, it is easy to conclude that a recession is on its way.  

But consider, if you look at all the recessions that are used as the basis for the strength of this signal, only the Covid recession occurred after the Fed began its QE program in 2009.  Prior to the GFC, the Fed just never held very many long-term Treasury bonds and $0.00 of mortgage-backed securities on its balance sheet.  It is not hard to believe that the Fed has substantially distorted the yield curve for the past 14 years, driving long-term rates far lower than they otherwise would have been based on economic conditions.  What would 10-year Treasury yields look like if the Fed didn’t own the ~$7.25 trillion of long-dated paper that currently sits on the balance sheet?  I suggest 10-year yields would be A LOT higher.  100bps?  Maybe.  Maybe more, maybe less, but 10-year yields are not really telling us that investors believe the economy is going to slow down.  Rather, I might suggest they are telling us that many players are bidding for bonds because they must for regulatory reasons (banks and insurance companies) and that there isn’t as much supply available as the gross issuance would indicate.

But, keeping that in mind, the data that gets released regularly continues to confuse.  For instance, yesterday saw Initial Claims data fall further, back to 228K and below all forecasts.  The rising trend that we had seen a few months ago seems to be reversing.  At the same time, the Philly Fed data was weaker than expected at -13.5 and Existing Home Sales fell to 4.16M.  Finally, Leading Indicators printed at -0.7%, a tick worse than forecast and the 15th consecutive negative reading of this indicator.  So, which is it?  Employment strength means growth?  Or weakening manufacturing and housing points to weakness?  As I wrote earlier this week, we need a new term to describe the current economy, as recession in the traditional view doesn’t seem right, but growth remains lackluster at best with parts of the economy, notably manufacturing, seemingly in contraction.

Well, as we head into the weekend, that is a lot to consider, and perhaps inspiration will strike and we will all understand things on Monday.  Just don’t count on it!  Meanwhile, ending the week, equities are kind of unhappy, with the Nikkei not taking kindly to the BOJ talk and probably a few more losers than gainers in Asia.  That same sentiment prevails in Europe, with both gainers and losers but leaning toward negative while US futures are bouncing from yesterday’s declines.
Bond yields are drifting a bit lower this morning, but only on the order of 1bp-2bps in the US and Europe, although Gilt yields have risen 2bps on the back of much stronger than expected UK Retail Sales data released today.  We’ve already discussed JGB’s, and I expect those yields to grind lower from here along with the yen.

Oil, however, has continued its recent strong performance, up 1.2% this morning on supply concerns as there were larger than expected draws on inventories this week.  Meanwhile, gold (-0.2%) is edging lower as the dollar regains its footing.  Today, copper and aluminum are both a bit firmer, but their recent trend continues downward.

Finally, the dollar is definitely in fine fettle this morning, rallying against all its G10 counterparts except NOK (+0.4%) which is obviously benefitting from oil’s rally.  The yen (-1.15%) is the laggard, which given the BOJ news, is no surprise.  Meanwhile, in the EMG space, it is a sea of red with THB (-1.3%) the worst performer followed by KRW (-1.1%) and TWD (-0.5%).  The baht saw a setback with the ongoing political machinations as hopes for a new government have been delayed, if not dashed, while the won saw its exports fall sharply as Chinese economic activity slows.  Taiwan is feeling the same effects as South Korea in that regard.

And that’s really it for today.  There is no data nor any speakers on the calendar, so the dollar seems likely to simply follow today’s sentiment which, given its weakness over the past several sessions, is likely to see more short covering and potentially a bit more strength.

Good luck and good weekend
Adf